Refurbed this now.
Obviously, the quality of my handiwork has an impact on the results obtained, and calibration is a juggling act between so many different functions, but I'm finding reads a tad low on AC voltages (like 220V compared to 230V on the Fluke) which I've found is pretty common on older meters, if not quite as good as the VTVM, so no issues with that. It reads Capacitor values like a charm. Very accurate. DC voltage, accuracy fluctuates depending on the range, but accuracy is comparable to my other older meters. Current, I haven't really analysed accuracy of it in detail yet.
Resistance is typical 'analogue' meter. I can't really read above 1meg ohm with much accuracy, except, it'll reveal if a 10meg is open or short, it won't really tell me if it's 15 meg or 9.5meg for example with any accuracy. Accuracy for all other ranges is a little squewy when the needle is getting to close to the full left hand range of movement, but I know to double check such measurements by changing the setting to the correct range for that resistor and reading it again (accurately this time). It only claims to be accurate to 200K anyway, so the way I've got mine dialed in it's exceeding the published specs anyway. I'm happy with that.
Haven't tested the transistor component, I doubt I will ever use it as i have some other more fun analysers for transistors.
I really like this meter. Sometimes the odd new cap ends up in the wrong drawer on my desk, so I check most caps before I install them. It's more fun to check cap values of a new cap for example with this, then with the fluke. (my basic fluke 101 is a bit slow at checking caps anyway to be honest, this meter reads them quicker. I really only keep the fluke as a reference meter to keep all the old junk I have calibrated)